First Beaver

dogone

Well-Known Member
Just read that the first family of beavers was released in Scotland. Did this take place near any of you?
They may turn out to be a big mistake. Now that trapping is no longer profitable they have flooded tens of thousands of acres of forest and some farmland. In Saskatchewan we may have land to spare but the UK seems quite densely populated.
 
This happened a while ago. 10+ years for a legal reintroduction in Knapdale, where they are spreading very slowly and not causing too much grief due to the terrain and the fact most of the area is commercial forestry.

There was also an illegal release in Perthshire were they are spreading quickly and cause real problems for many farmers. These have now been given protected status
 
Different species (European as opposed to North American) marginally different behaviours and widely regarded (jury is out) to be an ecosystem engineer over this way. Political hot potato and very divisive subject bound to cause upset with many. Releases have as said above been going on for a long time, legitimately all behind fences though there have been several illegal unfenced releases too.
 
Just read that the first family of beavers was released in Scotland. Did this take place near any of you?
They may turn out to be a big mistake. Now that trapping is no longer profitable they have flooded tens of thousands of acres of forest and some farmland. In Saskatchewan we may have land to spare but the UK seems quite densely populated.
Completely different outfit to the Canadian beaver- European beavers make much smaller dams. Been in Wales a while also.
 
Hmmm.
Now pest proportions on the Tay and creating problems for motorists - there are two high-viz besuited gentlemen rejoicing in the title Beaver Officers who are employed on safety (Beavers?) around Aberfeldy - I have actually seen them, they do exist.
An informal chat with some residents suggests that no-one is particularly happy about their introduction and spread and even the local landowners are complaining because of detrimental effects on their private hydro schemes. If memory serves they have been so “successful” that a cull was started (only if a course had been attended first by the aspiring Beaver Hunter) but apparently this was soon “blocked” - you could guess by who….
This is just some of the damage I saw last year in a 40 yards stretch - either side of the busy road just across the old Tay bridge at Aberfeldy. These mature trees will if left inevitably will fall onto the footpath/road but as can be seen below “preventative measures“ are in place, Anyhoo, what’s a few crushed pedestrians/cars, give or take….
Go figure.
🦊🦊
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Fishing at Stenton a few weeks ago, the far bank is completely wrecked and the trees will soon be dead. It looked like something out of a cartoon.
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Someone will have them on their bucket list.
Me, I had 2 shots and seem to have missed both, first at less than 100M swimming, second at 2 M diving.
I have no explanation for either failure.
It was a source of great hilarity back at breakfast.
Since I’d been up at 0300 and sleep deprived, I maintained a dignified silence, had a beer and trotted off to bed til they got over it.
I’ll be back.
 
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